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Scramble to beat UK stamp duty ignites property market

cottageProperty sales soared ahead in Britain as investors rushed to beat the rise in stamp duty.

Transactions surged in March before the extra 3% stamp duty on additional property was imposed on 1 April.

Prices went up as demand rose, leading to more than 4% rise in most UK cities. The sharpest rate of increase was marked in Liverpool, which is likely to have been due to the affordability of property there and the prospect of attracting renters for buy-to-let landlords.

The purchases were concentrated predominately in cities. Manchester and Leeds also experienced price hikes, but the highest yearly rise was in Cambridge with more than 15% increase over March last year, followed closely by London.

Sales were recorded at the highest quarterly rate in 12 years but analysts believe that the level of sales was related to the tax surcharge on additional home purchases.

Consequently, sales are predicted to taper off sharply now that the deadline has passed and the additional tax is in place and with the uncertainty of the EU referendum on the economy and mortgage rates.

HMRC revealed that 161,990 properties were sold in March, up 77% from March 2015.

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Comments  

+1 #1 Steve.O 2016-04-27 16:31
Where can we get this level of detail in Portugal? Does Financas publish it cross referenced to the Conservatoria / Land Registry ? Or is it still being skewed here by the declared sale value being so much less than the actual sale value? The balance being paid in cash.

So much harder to do in the UK as estate agents have to log their time to each property, 2 sets of lawyers likewise. Councils and various Ministries being searched so able to track any movement. Neighbours and even search engines like zoopla then tracking who paid what.

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